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tv   New Day  CNN  May 27, 2016 3:00am-6:01am PDT

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usual speeches on the nuclear race, on events in the world. he didn't get into policy. they didn't want this to be quite the same. in fact, he broadened this out as broadly as you possibly can talking about the nature of humanity itself. listen. >> we have a shared responsibility to look directly into the eye of history, and ask what we must do differently to curb such suffering again, but the memory of the morning of august 6, 1945 was never -- that memory allows us to fight complacency. it fuels our moral imagination. >> reporter: is a president who has tried to end wars but has been confronted with other conflicts, who's aimed for
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denuclearization, had some success, the iron nuclear deal and especially korea looms large. you could hear the president delivering his speech. he knew it was a historic moment and wanted to emphasize certain words. he spoke very slowly. he really wanted this sow sink in. he did talk about due nuclearization, waiting for a world where people would determine that nuclear weapons were no longer necessary, but he says that's not even enough. that it's time to change the human mind-set on war itself. >> michelle kaczynski traveling with the president on this historic trip to hiroshima. this, comes at a critical time with america on the world stage with all eyes on the presidential race. donald trump says it's a good thing. trump fires back after closing the deal to be the republican
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nominee. cnn's jason carroll joins us with the details. >> reporter: donald trump hitting on a number of topic yesterday taking aim not only at president obama but hillary clinton as well and relishing in having enough delegates to accept the party's nomination. >> we had a big day today. today was a day where we hit the 1,237. right? 1,237. >> reporter: donald trump, officially clinching the republican nomination, and squashing the once fervent efforts from the gop establishment to stop him. >> most of them said, and they said very strongly, he will never be the nominee. i could name him but i don't want to embarrass him. >> reporter: trump boastful he's one step closer to the white house than hillary clinton. >> here i am watching hillary fight and she can't close the deal. that should be such an easy deal to close. >> reporter: trump continuing to hit clinton hard on that inspector general's report which criticized her for using her
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personal e-mail server to do government business when she was secretary of state. >> this has bad judgment. this was all bad judgment. probably illegal, we'll have to see what the fbi says about it. >> reporter: also taking aim at president obama. >> he's a president who's done a horrible job. obama could never come up with a solution. number one, he's incompetent. >> reporter: after obama voiced world leader concerns after a g7 summit. >> the proposals he's made display ignorance of world affairs or a cavalier attitude. >> reporter: hillary clinton echoing those fears. >> this man who is an unqualified loose cannon is within reach of the most important job in the world, so it should concern every ameri n american. >> reporter: but a defiant trump -- >> i'll have a better relationship with other countries than he has, except
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keel bo much better and they won't be taking advantage of us anymore. >> oh, i'm sorry about that. pocahontas? is that what you said? i think she's as native american as i am. okay? that i will tell you. but she's a woman that's been very ineffective, other than she's got a big mouth. >> reporter: trump hinting he's wide open to who his running mate will be after his campaign chair said choosing a woman would be viewed as pandering. >> we're looking for absolute competence. i fully expect we will have many women involved. >> reporter: though trump has the delegates for the nomination he still has work to do to secure his own party. trump saying he had a good conversation with house speaker paul ryan this week, but still no endorsement from ryan, and once again, trump saying he
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would like to debate bernie sanders, saying it would be a dream. chris? >> jason carroll. thank you very much. the news is out there and swirling in all of these different directions. so let's bring it back down to a good discussion. what about this historic moment at hiroshima? what is the impact of it and what about the latest turns in the election? we have for you, cnn campaign correspondent for the "new york times" maggie haggerman and cnn political commentator and anchor of time warner cable news, errol louis. you probably saw it. those who did not in the control room, put up the scenes of president obama embracing the family members and victims of the hiroshima attack. it seems like that was the real moment there, earle lewis. preside -- errol louis. no apology but reconciliation. >> this is a president that made him one of his signature move,
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even before he got elected. really. remember back to the 2008 campaign, speaks at the brandenburg gate, travels around the world, playing the role of leader of the free world, one of the titles that the president -- >> what about the balance? shouldn't apologize? apologize, makes us look weak. what about what they did? what about pearl harbor? how did he balance that here? >> it's extraordinary. that issue, does it make america look weak, it's really not an issue with japan. right? nuclear weapons used. war ended. really, no military for japan to speak of. never -- it's never been a question, i think, on the table, in american politics, about whether or not an apology was warranted, wanted or even appropriate. so i thought of this as, the apology tour is something the republican the beat up on obama about, mostly about the middle east, about other kind of issues. about europe. japan, i think this is different. this is sort of special.
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unique, i think. and this is, i think what he was really sort of conveying. the only president ever to have done this. >> maggie, something so poignant about recognizes this moment, where deadly enemies within the space of a very short time can become allies and even friends, and to just see that with what's going on today i don't know. there's something sort of comforting or instructive about things change, and then you put back into our political race, what's happening, donald trump saying he likes world leaders might be rattled by him and his followers also, because they do like an unpredictability about what the u.s. would do in the future. >> one of the significant aspects of are this trip, i believe is about signaling what is happening in terms of the potential of a nuclear armed north korea, and i think that is part of what president obama was hoping to accomplish saying essentially there is a danger here in escalation. there is a danger here in what the past can teach us about the
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futu future. you had donald trump say in an interview not that long ago that he was open to a nuclear armed japan and south korea and later said to anderson cooper, north korea and that region will be nuclear armed anyway. i think you are seeing president obama halt that, try to draw a line. you are right. donald trump likes unpredictability. there are down sides to that and i think that's where president obama was trying to make a very stark difference to. >> you look at trump and the press conference and to paraphrase bruce springsteen, felt one step up two steps back. talked about what we'd do with energy, actually outlined plan proposals or points, talking points on it. unusual for trump. unusual in the selection. but then went back into his heavy artillery about hillary clinton specifically. we have the sound of him talking about vince foster, which he is trying to have both ways. right? he's trying to say, i don't know about it, but --
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here's how he put it. >> i really know nothing about the vince foster situation. haven't known anything about it and some asked me the question the other day and i said that a lot of people are very skeptical as to what happened and how he died. i know nothing about it. i don't think it's something that, frankly, really -- unless evidence to the contrary of what i've seen comes up, i don't think it's something that should really be part of the campaign. >> but he keeps making it part of the campaign. he could just short-circuit it. is he trying to have it both ways? or trump's attempt at making it fair? >> that's a nice way of putting it. he's raised an abosurd conspiray theory when asked about it could, have given the answer he just gave. i don't know anything about it, let's move on.
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he nerver does that. he plays to the conspiracy, and slowly eats at another news cycle. instead of talking about any reg vent or policy, he wants to stir the pot, rile up the base and stop the campaign from really talking about issues. >> also something interesting where donald trump even though he doesn't know anything about it, either hasn't looked into it and researched it so he does know tab or doesn't stop him from mentions it and talking about it. people say there seeming to be a lack of intellectual curiosity, dismisses with i don't know anything about that, but ask away. >> said repeatedly in many forms that he likes starting a conversation. thinks it's exciting, interesting. what he's doing is raising character questions about hillary clinton. to that extent of the presidential campaign, trying to hit your rival, that's the relevance, but a lot of people look at it, say, if you don't know anything about it, why be we musing about it, why not shut
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it down and move on? >> dinner party politics. we're heading into this weekend. should be a solemn occasion, certainly lots of barbecues. you will hear conversations no matter where you are, or who you hang out with and the word pocahontas is going to come up. a division. people willsy that's offensive. i don't care what elizabeth warren's heritage is. >> others say, she's not indian. it's p.c., ba, ba, ba. does he win on this? >> i don't think so. absolutely not. people use racist, offensive talk if you used in your workplace. >> how? alisyn pointed out to me when i tried to drop that bomb, pocahontas is a hero? >> your h.r. people, mine, most people watching this broadcast, that you would be, you know, p
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reprima reprimanded, fired. >> you can't define somebody by calling them a name of an entire ethnicity. >> right. exactly. and you know, faster than you can say hostile workplace, you would have a problem. donald trump -- >> he says i can't mock you as native american, because you're not. >> look, to be clear, during the senate race between elizabeth warren and scott brown, this was not a great issue for her. six weeks spent on stumbling around, trying to figure how to answer this. it was never a great answer and the reality, some of what trump is trying to point to, elizabeth warren for all of the talk about how she a great counterpuncher, great at framing this, was not a great day-to-day candidate and he was trying to erode the valley she could bring on the democratic side. >> stick around. want to talk about hillary clinton's e-mails. first to ana. the battle in california is heating up this morning. hillary clinton and bernie sanders now neck and neck in the polls. clinton forced on the defense again after that scathing report
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from the inspector general's office on her private e-mail usage, as sanders turns up the heat on donald trump to debate him. cnn sunlen surfoti joins us from los angeles with more. sunlen? >> reporter: good morning, ana. both bernie sanders and hillary clinton are campaigning here in california today leading into the june 7 primary. of course, the last day of contests in this nominating calendar, but hillary clinton is now finding herself facing considerable head winds in her quest to close this out. overnight, bernie sanders stoking talk of a debate between him and donald trump. >> you made it possible for us to have a very interesting debate. >> that's right. >> about two guys who look at the world very, very differently. >> reporter: and blasting his primary opponent hillary clinton for declining to debate before california's june 7th primary. >> it's kind of insulting to the people of the largest state in the united states of america,
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not to come forward and talk about the issues, serious issues that impact this state and impact the country. >> reporter: trump appears to be taking the bait, as long as they can raise millions for charity. >> i'd love to debate bern pip he's a dream. >> reporter: clinton scrambling to drum up support before the delegate-rich primary and sanders refuses to concede the nomination. the latest poll in california shows clinton and sanders locked in a dead heat just days before the final contests. >> if we can win big here in california, and in the other five states that are up on june 7th, we're going to go marching in to the democratic convention with enormous momentum -- and i believe we're going to go marching out with the democratic nomination. >> reporter: contending with trust issues over her personal e-mail use as secretary of state, clinton going on an uncharacteristic media blitz, defending letters against a scathing inspector general report which called her out for setting up and using a private
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e-mail server. >> this report makes clear that personal e-mail use was the practice under other secretaries of state, and the rules were not clarified until after i had left. but as i said many times it was still a mistake. if i could go back i'd do it differently. >> reporter: and today hillary clinton will start airing her very first television commercials here in the state of california, certainly one sign especially given those latest poll numbers, that she understands she's going to have to fight for it in this final stretch. chris? >> all right, sunlen, thank you very much. hillary clinton in the news. mounting a defense against a blistering report from an inspector general about her e-mail use. a lot of spin in the air about the e-mail controversy. what are the actual violations? what is clinton's defense? the facts -- ahead. cancer...
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use was a practice under other secretaries of state, and the rules were not clarified until after i had left, but as i've said many times it was still a mistake. if i could go back i'd do it differently, and i understand -- all right. that was hillary clinton saying she did nothing with her e-mails differently than had been done before. so how big of a problem is this? and what about that possible sanders/trump debate? there's a lot to discuss with maggie haberman and errol louis. how big a problem is this i.g. report about what hillary clinton did wrong with her e-mails? >> i don't know if it moves the ball politically, people saying i didn't realize it, what the policy called for. it was clear all along she didn't do what the policy called for. >> there are new things in t. interesting nuances to it. think point out that, you know, this is exactly what she did, what she said -- she said there
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were no guidelines. they're making clear, there were guidelines. not entirely clear how you comply with the policy. her bottom line, though, politically, she gets to say what she's always said. she didn't want her personal e-mails mixes up with state department e-mail which is would become part of a public record. wasn't clear thousand it and chose a way the state department didn't really approve of in advance. >> didn't she say she got approval and now we hear she hadn't? >> that is what's problematic. there's two. that's a big one, three. it makes clear that it was not widely known what she was doing with this e-mail. not widely known a lot of her staffers were, top aides, four of them, routinely using private e-mail for work, apparently, and that the report makes clear there were three people who exclusively relied on private e-mail, colin powell, former secretary of state, hillary clinton another, and a former ambassador to kenya under clinton in 2011 and 2012, and i
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remember the i.g. report around him. it was pretty critical. critical of him for many things. there were other issues with him. the fact he used personal e-mail and went to great lengths to do it was highly criticized. the report says that is how it is normally handled when it's an issue. good news, donald trump is stepping all over this. this would be dominating headlines if we weren't talking about debate gimmick essentially between bernie sanders and donald trump. so if hillary clinton has a not terrible week, i do think errol is right. most people's takeaway this week, we knew about the e-mail situation already. >> all right. we want to talk about the debate, but i think that we've got to take one more beat on this. this is still confusing. i'm listening to the discussion. i'm an attorney. i still think it's confusing, and i think it matters, this issue. the clinton people do not like this assessment, but i think this issue goes to the root of her unfavorable numbers.
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>> i agree. >> they'll argue, no, no, no. something else. the 30 years of piling on. in the exchange you two had -- there was it a rule, there was a rule in place in 2009, right? they change rules. she was there. this was supposed to get clearance. did it get clearance? >> as far as the report -- >> yes. >> no. >> this person looked into it. no. and the people at the top were told, let's not talk about this anymore. >> not mention t. however, in the i.g. report the state department reports they didn't do a good job of the new rules. >> were sloppy. yes, lots of other things with grati gration making him flawed. did anybody else have the kind of infrastructure to seal off her communication? >> that's a big piece of it. had her own server. colin powell using private
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e-mail, far as we know, he did not have a separate setup. if people want to -- aol, actually, going back a ways, but if people wanted to obtain his e-mails they would have gone to him directly or aol. in this case the only person to go to was hillary clinton. that's part of the problem. >> the last part of the problem is, where are the e-mails that you deleted? that you were supposed to give us the e-mails. there was a subpoena. you went through them and said, you only want the ones that deal with work. so i'm going to separate the ones out, and allegedly got rid of them. was that allowed? was that the right reaction? >> that, i think, is the heart of the problem. something a-othat goes against. politics of the moment. there's a public records act, freedom of information law. >> aol would have coughed them up? hadn't been on a private server, because of freedom of information, if it was public server they would have found the e-mails and handed them over? >> a different path and probably needs to be guidelines saying print out every e-mail. you have to make a record.
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you know? you can't sort of find these ways to sort of -- >> and 55,000 pages more than anybody's ever given you. >> or use the government e-mail. another problem, an issue known about previously, you're right a complicated issue, confusing to talk about. for a lot of people, including us. but in i think 2010 there was problem where people, her e-mail system wasn't working, couldn't receive them and basically discovered at that point by other people she using a private e-mail. one of her aides at this point said you either set up a government e-mail or we do it differently. she made clear in this e-mail she did not want the personal e-mails getting discovered. i believe her reason for that, talk to people close to her, she has been investigated in some form off another for decades, in the contention of her allies wrongly in a lot of cases and didn't want to have people poring through her personal stuff, the problem is, the way you deal with that, then, is a government e-mail.
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>> maggie and errol, thank you. have a night holiday weekend. >> that was helpful. people will talk about it all weekend. nobody knows what they're talking about. that was very helpful, because it's confusing and everybody's going to have an opinion. >> it is confusing. thank you. get to ana. hopefully if you're up early with us this morning it's because you are getting ready to go have some fun. it is getaway day on one of the busiest travel weekends of the year. if you're flying we have information you'll want to stick around for. we are going to check just how long you will need to wait to get to your gate, and what is the tsa now doing to speed up security screening? a live report on this next, here on "new day." uh oh. oh. henry! oh my. good, you're good. back, back, back. (vo) according to kelley blue book, subaru has the highest resale value of any brand.
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welcome back on this busy holiday travel weekend. the tsa now announcinger in move to try to ease the long wait times at airport security checkpoints. it's now asking congress for another $28 million to make nearly 3,000 part-time security officers full time. we are keeping tabs on this for you and the weekend holiday forecast. we begin with rosa florez live
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at chicago's o'hare international airport. one of the trouble spots lately. rosa? >> reporter: ana, good morning. well, this was the terminal that made national headlines a few weeks ago because 450 passengers were stranded. they had to sleep on cots. take a look at the line this morning. it long, but it is moving fairly swiftly, at a pretty good clip, but as you can see, this swirls around, it snakes through. now, here are the changes so far. there are 58 new tsa agents here at o'hare. overtime was tripled and five canines were brought in. you can see that the dogs are right over there, and what we learned from the tsa is with these canines an extra 5,000 passengers can be cleared every single day, and, of course, nationally, about 800 tsa agents were also, tsa is planning to add those 800 agents. that cost $34 million, but like you said, ana, $28 million is
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what the tsa is asking for now and expecting that with that money they can screen about an extra 82,000 passengers a day. >> wow. looking at it there, it's only 5:30, and those lines are long already. rosa florez, our thanks to you. >> reporter: they are. right now -- >> go ahead -- >> reporter: no. i was going say right now the tsa is recommending passengers arrived two hours early foredomestic flights and three hours early format flights and these passengers, ana, they are heeding the warning. a lot of the domestic patterns are arriving at least three hours early to make sure they don't miss that flight and their plans for the holiday weekend. >> no kidding. thank you so much, rosa florez reporting from chicago, o'hare's airport, the weather another factor in your plans this weekend. let's get the forecast now from cnn's meteorologist in charge.
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alisyn, severe weather? >> yes. if it wasn't bad enough dealing with tsa, look at airport delays due to weather alone. dallas and houston, thunderstorms causing delays from that. memphis also dealing with thunderstorms today and seattle and san francisco could be dealing with delays. not just air travel. roads are also going to be a big issue. interstate 10, 20, 35 and 45 will all be big issues today if you're traveling by road. mainly because of rain and severe weather. this is where we have the big threat today. large hail, damaging winds, and, yes, potential for isolated tornadoes, and also flooding. brenham in texas had over 16 inches of rain and more rain is expected going through. here's a look at memorial day. not too bad, but, again, we are expecting the potential for maybe even a tropical disturbance to form over the coming days and that could bring even more bad weather through the weekend. >> all right. thank you for that. just watching that thing swirling around. we always have the same
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feelings. hopefully it stalls. hopefully it doesn't get stronger but thanks for keeping us in the loop on that information. we'll check back. take a break. president obama made history in hiroshima. no president has visited there since the atomic bomb was dropped 17 years ago. he had a very specific message about the people who live there now about the day the world was changed, as he put it. that's next.
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but we have a shared responsibility to look directly into the eye of history, and ask what we must do differently to curb such suffering again, but the memory of the morning of august 6, 1945 must never fade. >> that was president obama making history in hiroshima this morning. the first sitting u.s. president to go there since the u.s. dropped an atomic bomb that nearly obliterated that japanese city 70 years ago. here 0 discuss, california congressman mark decano whose
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family is from hiroshima. korng congress mang, thanks for beings with this morning. >> thanks for having me. good morning. >> tell us what this day means for you and your family? >> for my family it's extremely meaningful that the president's gone to hiroshima to call the world's attention to the cause of nuclear disarmament and nonproliferation. i think the people of hiroshima and the people of japan are going to feel a great deal of not only comfort but reassurance that the president is really trying to make sure that another nuclear weapon is never, ever used again. >> your great-grandmother saw the explosion in hiroshima. she was in a sweet potato patch, in the mountains, and she saw it happen. she witnessed it with her own eyes. she thought it was a fertilizer fire. >> yes. >> and you wrote a letter to the president sort of urging him to
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make this trip. you said it would be happying. can you explain how this visit will help heal your family? >> well, you know, my family, of course, my mother and father and most of my grandparents, they born here in the united states. so they were actually in american internment camps during the war and there was always an ambivalence against japan and it wasn't until i was age 41 that i actually myself went to japan with a lot of mixed feelings, but when i met my relative, my second cousin who had been in america after the war, she never, ever been to the peace museum. she was a 12 or 13-year-old girl at the time the bomb dropped. most of her classmates perished because they were near ground zero and she was kept home that day by her mother who lived about two miles outside the city
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center. as we drove in to the peace museum for the first time for both of us, she pointed to the ota river, we crossed the river on a bridge and they say that the water could not be seen. the surface of the water, so covered with dead bodies. at that moment i thought to myself, every world lead here controls a nuclear arsenal should come to hiroshima to really comprehend the result of a nuclear weapon. >> what a moment for history and for our country and for your family, of course. so congressman, let's talk about what's going on back here at home. you, of course, your district is in california. >> they. >> bernie sanders and donald trump seem to be both amenable to having a debate in california. should hillary clinton be a part of that debate? >> well, that's up to secretary clinton. >> do you think would be wise?
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now that it seems they're taking it seriously, these are two opponents, might be have a debate without her. should she be involved? >> well, i think secretary clinton and, you know, senator sanders have had ample time and numerous debates to be able to flush out their differences. i don't know what another debate would do to amplify, you know, the distinctions among the candidates. and so, you know, i don't really have a strong opinion about whether she should be a part of that debate or not. >> here's the problem, congressman. in your home state of california look at the polls. this is the latest polling out of california. hillary clinton at 46%. bernie sanders at 44%. i believe that's within the margin of error. what do you thinks is going to nap your state? >> i continue to believe that hillary clinton will prevail on june 7th. i believe she will be the nominee of our party, regardless what happens in california, but
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i still believe she's going to win california, and the math is the math. she will be our nominee and it will be a moment at which we're going to unite around her and i have every bit of confidence that the people that have been supporting bernie sanders, most of them, are also going to begin to coalesce around secretary clinton and knowing the stark choice of dnonald trump -- donad trump who says south korea should get they're own weapons, this is simply no comparison between, say, secretary clinton and someone who's nonhave nonch donald trump. i think we'll see the beginning of a coalescence around hillary clinton and unification of the party. >> thanks for being onned in and in sharing your family's
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personal story today. >> you're welcome. thank you. over to chris. another big story in the news now what's going on at baylor university, and they certainly got big black eye. the president, ken starr, the man hue prosecuted bill clinton in the monica lewinsky case you remember, stripped of his title and demoted. there is a rape scandal involving the football team and it's escalating. we have new details for you coming up. ning enough cash back from bank of america to buy a new gym bag. before earning 1% cash back everywhere, every time and 2% back at the grocery store. even before he got 3% back on gas. kenny used his bankamericard cash rewards credit card to join the wednesday night league. because he loves to play hoops. not jump through them. that's the excitement of rewarding connections. apply online or at a bank of america near you.
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uh, no thanks. i have x1 from xfinity so... don't fall for directv. xfinity lets you download your shows from anywhere. i used to like that song. fallout this morning from the alleged cover-up of sexual assault on the campus of baylor university. kenneth starr, formerer independent counsel who investigated bill clinton and the monica lewinsky case stripped of his title and university president and demoted. the school is accused of mishandling reports of rape involving football players and cnn ed lavandera has more on this. ed? >> reporter: good morning, ana. it took a number of former baylor female students who had been raped to come forward, personally tell their stories, for all of this to be uncovered. baylor university is demoting
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its president ken starr and firing their head football coach art briles. members of the university's bort board of regents are "horrified by the findings of an independent investigation." the scathes report found a fundamental failure to respond students' sex assault allegations and detailed troubling mishandling of rape by players on the texas school's nationally ranked football team. the baylor bombshell happened under the leadership of starr who led the impeachment of then president bill clinton in the 1990s. starr hasn't responded to cnn's request for comment, and an attorney for one sexual assault victim and former baylor student jasmine hernandez isn't surprised guy the findings. >> this is a serious issue. in the case of jasmine's case, we'll be able to show that ken starr had knowledge of this throughout theth lea athletic am
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and they did absolutely nothing to protect these female students. >> reporter: baylor is apologizing and pledging to do better. her nan edd z is suing the scho. this football player is serving a 20-year sentence. >> i'll still always a little bit surprised that they never did anything except kind of re-route me to other people who in turn re-routed me to other people and i never really got help. >> reporter: now, ken starr will remain at the university. he will become the chancellor, we're told has no real duties on the internal operations of the school and remain as a professor at the baylor law school. however, several regents were pressed on this yesterday if art briles was fired, viewed as a failure of leadership, why wasn't ken starr fired altogether? and baylor regents would not
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answer those questions. >> what a story to have ken starr be involved in. thank you for all of that. well, another important story to tell you about a superbug, resistant to eastern the strongest antibiotics discover eed in the u.s. what it is and what can be done about it? we have the details. burning of diabetic nerve pain, these feet learned the horn from my dad and played gigs from new york to miami. but i couldn't bear my diabetic nerve pain any longer. so i talked to my doctor and he prescribed lyrica. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions
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or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worsening depression, or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling or blurry vision. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs, and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. now i have less diabetic nerve pain. ask your doctor about lyrica.
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the medicine cabinet is empty for some patients. it is the end of the road for
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antibiotics, unless we act urgently. >> that reaction after a female patient was found carrying a bacteria resistant to even the most powerful antibiotics. the first time this superbug appeared in the u.s. that was cdc director thomas frieden, the doctor sounding the alarm. how bad can it be? and what can be done? let's get answers for you. dr. alexander garza, former assistant secretary forehealth affairs and from homeland security, currently associate dean of the university college of public health. doctor, good to have you this morning. how worried should we be? >> well, i think it's sort of a mixed message. so, yes, we should be concerned, antibiotics resistance is growing every year you're hearing about a new bacteria that are becoming resistant to antibiotics, but on the other hand i think there's still a lot we can be doing to prevent that spread of resistance from occurring. >> what does that mean, though? you know, somebody hears, "resistant to antibiotics."
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it seems to mean, if you get this, there's a chance you die. how dire is the concern? >> right. so the particular patient we're talking about this morning is, has a gene that infers resistance to a drug called colistin. colistin is a very old drug formerly not used much because it did damage to the kidney, but more and more we have to turn to these old drugs because the newer drugs have been over over-prescribed or bacteria has become resistant to it. the fear is bacteria will become so resistant to the most of the antibiotics used out in the field, that potentially none will be able to be used to defeat them, if patients become infected. so that's the big concern with this newest bacteria resistance. >> so help me get it right. is it that the bug itself is resistant to everything? or is it that the bug, when combined with certain individuals who have some type of resistance as well or some
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kind of chemical component to their own blood chemistry that combination is what makes this so dire? >> a great question. the bacteria in question carries a gene calmed the mcr 1, never seen before in the united states in a human patient. so and it's also encoded on a particular piece of the genome calmed the plaz minh. this makes it more sort of scary in terms of antibiotic resistance, because a plazmid can be transferred to other bacteria. so the patient in question now is susceptible to other antibiotics, but the concern is that this piece of genomic material with this gene can then be spread to other bacteria that are resistant to other antibiotics, and potentially make these very, very difficult to treat and to, bacteria that aren't susceptible to any antibiotics. so that's the really big concern that's going on right now. >> are the bugs adapting faster
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than medicine is adapting to the ability to stop the bugs? >> well, it's sort of a -- sort of a give and take there. and so medicine and, quite frankly, agriculture practices have been contributing to this antibiotic resistance by using antibiotics in livestock and also the overprescription of antibiotics for human disease. so it's not so much that we haven't been able to keep up with treating the bugs. it's sort of a, yes, we need to develop new anti-box, but albioe to change our practices to prevent the superbugs from coming along in the first place. >> kind of lye like homs that clethat -- hospitals that clean all the tile. anything that can survive in the an small resistant to that antibiotic and we get increased problem? does that sound right? >> you're absolutely right.
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if you eliminate one strain a more strong one will grow. >> everybody's in the kashcars, traveling, big wend entering into memorial day. zika virus is in the air, both figuratively and literally. how dire is that situation? >> well, it's dire for those countries that have the endimmick zika spread. so it's spread naturally through the mosquito. for them, devastating, and unfortunately we discovered it too late for many of those countries in south and central america. the united states is a little bit different. you know, our weather patterns are a little bit different. the spread of the mosquito is a little different and frankly our infrastructure is a little different, meaning we have air conditioning. we have screens. all of these other things to prevent widespread of the zika virus. so the things to keep in mind are exactly what the cdc has been putting out. so people that are highest at
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risk, pregnant females, shouldn't travel to areas endemic for the zika virus. as you know, the summer months are coming right around the corner, right around memorial day, and we all need to take precautions to prevent infection. >> all right. obviously, we always want to give people the right information, but not scare people unnecessarily. doctor, thank you very much for joining us. giving us perspective. the best to you and your family for the weekend. >> thank you. you, too. thank you. there is a lot of news in the air this morning about the election and the president just made history. so let's get right to it. here roma demonstrated it has the means to destroy itself. >> we may not be able to prevent evil. >> totally take add advantavant >> they're rattled.
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>> when you rattle someone, that's good. >> people may have a message for secretary clinton. >> i'm proud of the campaign. it's been a campaign about issues. no insults. the tornado looks like it's getting bigger. there's two tornadoes on the ground again. >> we have 80 mile-an-hour winds. >> boy, this one's rotating strong. >> announcer: this is "new day" with chris cuomo and alisyn camerota. good morning. welcome to your "new day." it's friday, may 27th. 7:00 in the east now. we have ana cabrera with us again. thank you for helping us get through this week. very hard. couldn't have done it without you but go have breaking news on this did day. president barack obama making history becoming the first u.s. president to visit hiroshima, 71 years after the u.s. dropped the first ademocratic bomb there killing more than 140,000 people in the closing days of world war ii. >> the president not giving an apology but a gesture's reconciliation and hugging survivors of the attack.
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president obama's historic attack comes as all eyes are on the u.s. and who will become the next leader of the free world. we have this story and the 2016 race covered only the way cnn can. we begin with cnn's michelle kaczynski live in hiroshima for us. michelle? >> reporter: alisyn, right. to say this was a powerful moment, that it was emotional is understating it. we spoke to people who said they cried they waumpd ttched the president's word. he could have said almost anything, just an acknowledgement is something the japanese waited for a long time. he spoke of responsibility, of mistakes but it wasn't the usual speech we might hear involving policy or politics. the white house didn't feel that was appropriate, just as they didn't feel an apology was appropriate. and so the president broadened this out just about as broadly as you could make it. he spoke to the nature of humanity itself.
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>> we have a shared responsibility to look directly into the eye of history, and ask what we must do differently to curb such suffering again, but the memory of the morning of auk 6, 1945 must never fade. that memory allows us to fight complacency. >> reporter: some japanese people are giving out origami birds. another extremely emotional moment was, when you see the front row there. hiroshima survivors. the president hugged 79-year-old survivor, who worked to recognize the american prisoners of war, who had died during that
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blast. the president spoke of denuclearization. during his time as president he's had a mixed record of trying to end wars as well as trying to reduce nuclear weapons around the world. the iran nuclear deal was a big success, but then you have the very real and large threat of north korea. especially in this region. but he said denuclearization isn't even enough. he called for humanity to change its mind-set on war itself. ana? >> michelle kaczynski reporting in hiroshima. thank you. now president obama stopped there, coming with eyes across the world on our presidential race. donald trump dismissing comments from the president that world leaders are rattled by trump, in fact, he called is a good thing, firing back after amassing enough delegates to officially be the presumptive republican nominee. cnn's jason carroll joins us with more. >> reporter: ana, donald trump thanked the people of north dakota for putting him over the
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top. he keyed in on a number of topics saying he would like to debate bernie sanders and had a few choice words for the president and hillary clinton. >> we had a big day today. today was a day where we hit the 1,237. right? 1,237. >> reporter: donald trump officially clinching the republican nomination, and squashing the once fervent efforts from the gop establishment to stop him. >> most of them said, and they said very strongly, he will never be the nominee. i could name him but i don't want to embarrass him. >> reporter: trump boasting that he's one step closer to the white house than hillary clinton. >> here i am watching hillary fight and she can't close the deal. that should be such an easy deal to close. >> reporter: trump continuing to hit clinton hard on that inspector general's report which criticized her for using her personal e-mail server to do government business when she was secretary of state. >> she has bad judgment. this was all bad judgment.
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probably illegal. we'll have to find out what the fbi says about it. certainly it was bad judgment. >> reporter: trump also taking aim at president obama. >> he's a president who's done a horrible job. obama could never come up with a solution. number one, he's incompetent. >> reporter: after obama voiced world leaders concerns after a g7 summit. >> they're rattled. the proposals that he's made displace either ignorance of world affairs or a cavalier attitude. >> reporter: hillary clinton echoing those fears. >> this man who is an unqualified loose cannon is within reach of the most important job in the world. so it should concern every american. >> reporter: but a defiant trump is embracing the criticism. >> that's good if they're nervous. that's good. i'll have a better relationship with other countries than he has, except keel bo much better and they won't be taking advantage of us anymore. >> reporter: as trump continuing
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to be hammered about remarks of democratic senator elizabeth warren. >> who? poke honcahonta pocahontas? >> is that offensive? >> it's very offensive. sorry. >> oh, i'm sorry about that. pocahontas. is that what you said? i think she's as native american as i am. okay? that i will tell you. but she's a woman that's been very ineffective, other than she's got a big mouth. >> reporter: trump hinting he's wide open to who his running mate will be after his campaign chairman said choosing a woman or minority would be vies add pandering. >> we're looking for absolute competence. i fully expect we will have many women involved. >> reporter: and a little more on trump's possible running mate. his campaign chairman paul man afor the telling the "huffington post" there is is a long candidates but they all have a lot of problems. going forward, trump has a lot to do to unite his party. house speaker paul ryan still has not endorsed him.
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trump said he a good conversation this week, ryan called it productive. thank you for that. bring in margaret hoover, cnn political commentator and former george w. bush white house staff member, john avalon, editor and chief for "the daily beast" and jeffrey lord, former white house political director and donald trump supporter. great to see you all. >> good morning. >> good morninging, ali. >> as we approach the memorial day weekend and the president in hiroshima, explain why it would be a good thing for world leaders to be rattled by donald trump? >> well, i think what we're seeing on the international stage is a version of what we've seen here domestically which is to say the outsider versus the insiders. just because you were the head of a foreign country doesn't mean you haven't managed to become in some sense part of an insider's club here, where everybody thinks the same, everybody does the same thing and meanwhile the results are terrible. so all he's really saying here is that -- people should be,
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quote/unquote, rattled in the sense that they should think anew and act anew and he would be a change agent in this. and that's a good thing. >> okay. john? >> yeah. i mean, look, i appreciate that jeffrey's trying to frame this all as insider/outsider. he's a disciplined political messenger and a subtle lincoln reference, awfully nice but doesn't go to the spirit of what president obama was saying. he's said consistently, when overseas, leaders saying, what the hell is going on in your country? >> donald trump says that's a good thing. unpredictability. get them back on their heels also. >> a difference, ronald reagan said he was a cowboy. acidology. this is about stability, stability of the individual and what it says about american stability as a leader in the free world nap is not nixon's madman theory of keep them off their game. it's actually about, is america starting to put forward people who don't reflect confidence in
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our capacity for self-governance. >> margaret, trump's supporters think that, you know what has been wrong with the u.s. and in foreign policy, one is that we always telegraph what we're going to do give a date swhaern we're going to do. isis knows our plan and donald trump would play it differently? >> what's unfortunately about president obama saying this overseas, especially an event like this, we're commemorating the terrible and horrific use of nuclear weapons, wading into the presidential race a little too early. we understand he has a political bone in this body and will go after it at the right moment. now isn't the right moment. what. does, give people who support donald trump and excuse that obama is being excessively political. in honesty, as republican, uncomfortable with donald trump ascending to world leadership, billions of lives are on the line based on the stability of the relationships we have with our allies. we don't want our allies
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rattled, pe want them to trust us. not just president obama is hearing this. leaders of currents saying, who don't have great records, africa, at human rights what are you doing, at united states of america? it is destabilizing for world leaders and their relationships with the united states. >> let's move on and talk about the twitter war donald trump and elizabeth warren are engaged in. i'll read you a couple tweets from yesterday to get a sense what's happening here. donald trump has been going after elizabeth warren, and he says i find it offensive that goof y elizabeth warren sometims referred to him as pocahontas, by him -- pretended to be native american to get into harvard. >> get your facts straight, donald trump, i didn't go to harvard. but we know what this refers to. he doesn't like that she has in her past referred to, said her ancestors had some native american heritage and he's been calling her pocahontas. jeffrey is it okay to make fun of somebody based on their
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enknissty and call them an ethnic name? >> this goes immediately to the heart of the political correctness argument, which has served as rocket fuel for the trump campaign. i mean, the charge here against elizabeth warren, as i recall from her senate campaign, that she used the alleged fact she was 1/32 chaserokee to get a jo at harvard. >> whether or not you believe is it okay to call hear name based on that is my question? >> i mean, it's not okay to use her race to get a job. that's the issue. that's the issue, and exactly what she did. >> is that the issue, john? >> i think donald trump is mocking her. much more confer comfortable as insults than ideas. i don't think it's actually about ethnicity so much as pointing out hypocrisy, but on a deeper level, of course, the man's impulse is sort of a junior high bully.
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and to keep needling which is not presidential. it's locker room humor doesn't translate to the oval office. >> it's a junior high bully using talk radio, right-wing talk radio, talking points and opposition research from the 1990s and republican playbooks, none of it is idea based or policy based and frankly none is politically salient for a general election audience. >> that leads me to my next thing. i really want to get to this. about vince foster. we know vince foster, donald trump was asked about the vince foster, his death by "the washington post." he said i don't know anything about it but a lot of people talk about it and think it's a conspiracy of some kind. now vince foster's brother has written an op-ed to the. "washington post." i want to read it. it is powerful. his brother says it is beyond con temple a politician would use a family tragedy to further his candidacy. trump recklessly insinuated my brother vincent w. foster jr. may have been murdered because of intimate knowledge and how
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wrong, how irresponsible, how cruel. this was -- i'm sorry. his sister. vince foster's sister who wrote this to "the washington post" yesterday. >> right. >> okay. jeffrey, that obviously was not the intention, i'm sure, of donald trump, to hurt the foster family. can we say he not invoke this anymore and not talk about this anymore? >> the thing about that-of-this that gets me, and we sget get into these situations, interesting that was in "the washington post." to borrow a phrase from the "huffington post," this is what you call journalist bait. in other words, donald trump didn't bring this subject up. "the washington post" brought it up and he responds to the furor over vince foster's death. he didn't bring it up. >> others respond differently saying we know that he committed suicide, tragically. >> right. i mean, he has since said, you know, that this is not what he's about and all of this kind of
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thing. i mean, i just think this is much ado about nothing, but exactly the kind of thing that drives -- >> and the issue is not having credibility and courage to say this is a conspiracy theory that surrounds vince foster. not saying, i don't know. some say i'll wait for more information. this has been exhaustibly investigated. when do you that, a conspiracy theorist, already in his camp, he has to win over the opposition and swing voters. you won't do it indulging in conspiracy theories. >> panel, thank you very much. have a nice weekend. over to chris. hillary clinton has another reason to be on the defensive. this scathing report from the inspector general. the state department. about her use of a private e-mail server while secretary of state. as bernie sanders amps up the pressure on trump to debate him before the california primaries. is that really going to happen? give you the reporting. cnn sunlen surfoti live in los angeles with more.
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sunlen? >> reporter: good morning, chris. both bernie sanders and hillary clinton are campaigning hard here in california. both will be here today leading into june 7th, which, of course, is the last day of contests in the primary calendar, but hillary clinton is certainly now finding herself facing considerably strong head winds as she tries to close this out. overnight, bernie sanders stoking talk of a debate between him and donald trump. >> you made it possible for us to have a very interesting debate. >> that's right. >> about two guys who look at the world very, very differently. >> reporter: and blasting his primary opponent hillary clinton for declining to debate before california's june 7th primary. >> it's kind of insulting to the people of the largest state in the united states of america, not to come forward and talk about the issues, serious issues that impact this state and impact the country. >> reporter: but trump appears to be taking the bait, as long
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as they can raise millions for charity. >> oh, i'd love to debate bernie. he's a dream. >> reporter: clinton scrambling to drum up support before the delegate-rich primary and sanders refuses to concede the nomination. the latest poll in california shows clinton and sanders locked in a dead heat just days before the final contests. >> if we can win big here in california, and in the other five states that are up on june 7th, we're going to go marching in to the democratic convention with enormous momentum -- and i believe we're going to go marching out with the democratic nomination. >> reporter: contending with trust issues over her personal e-mail use as secretary of state, clinton going on an uncharacteristic media blitz, defending herself against a scathing inspector general report which called her out for setting up and using a private e-mail server. >> this report makes clear that personal e-mail use was the practice under other secretaries of state, and the rules were not clarified until after i had left.
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but as i said many times it was still a mistake. if i could go back i'd do it differently. >> reporter: and hillary clinton started to to reach out and extend and olive branch to bernie sanders supporters. in san francisco notably went out of her way, praised senator sanders saying she's proud of his campaign and notably calling, making a direct call for california voters to send a message when they led to thhead ballot box on june 7th, trying very hard to close this out. >> thank you. so if bernie sanders and hillary clinton do debate before the primary in california? what does that mean for hillary clinton? we'll look at that, next. a big hassle? is not with safelite. this family needed their windshield replaced, but they're daughters heart was set on going to the zoo. so we said if you need safelite to come to the zoo we'll come to the zoo! only safelite can fix your windshield anywhere in the us.
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to debate without clinton? that's the question. let's discuss with cnn political contradicter and hillary clinton supporter hilary rosen and
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bernie sanders supporter bill crist. thank you for joining us. wish you both the best for this weekend as we remember the sacrifice of so many this monday for our own freedom. so this question is a provocative one. hillary clinton doesn't think so. here's her answer -- >> oh, women, this doesn't sound like a serious discussion. i'm looking forward to debating donald trump in the general election. i really can't wait to get on the stage with him. >> and what's your reaction to a possible debate between bernie sanders and donald trump? >> i just said, i don't think it's serious. sigh think that, you know, it's not going to happen. >> she gave wolf the, oh, wolf, hillary. gave him the oh, wolf, hilary. >> i've given wolf the oh, wolf. >> talking about something that is an impossibility? >> if i were donald trump i would not let this happen. bernie sanders will wipe the floor with him. senator sanders is a good debater. the only person who will lose in
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this entire endeavor will be donald trump. so -- for that reason, i can't actually imagine that trump will go forward with it. >> two points of pushback there, bill. one is in a debate against bernie sanders doesn't trump just have to say the word socialist the whole time, especially with what he's doing with galvanizing his base and how insulting for hillary clinton to not be included in a presidential debate? >> first of all, i agree with secretary clinton. i don't think it will happen for one reason. i think donald trump will chicken out, quite frankly, and as to donald trump insulting bernie sanders, but thing we haven't heard yet. i'll tell you, a perverse side of me would love to see this debate only because such a show it would be like pay per view television. the most watched debate i think in the history of, probably, forever, and what we're going to see is insults versus ideas. i mean, hillary is right. bernie sanders is ha been working these ideas, talking
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about these ideas the last 30, 40 years. he's encyclopedic. donald trump is clueless, and i don't think he'll dare get on the stage with bernie sanders. i don't think it would hurt hillary that she's not there. just seen as a spectacle and the republican party and donald trump would be the big losers if it were to happen. >> you steam to be selling trump very short for the only guy who's gotten the magic number of delegates, wiped the field of 17 people, as you guys struggle with basically just one another? >> chris, he didn't do it -- >> you raise one really important -- >> look at you trying to double team me. hilary rosen, go first. >> you raise a really important point which is no matter who donald trump debates, the bar will be very low for him, compared to secretary clinton, or bernie sanders, for that matter. you know, all he has to do in these debates is get a foreign
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leader's name pronunciation right and people are like, oh, wow. see? that's more than we've expected. so he's doing really well. >> do you think that's because of how disgusted people are with the status quo? which hillary clinton somewhat symbolizes for them. bernie sanders, somewhat to a lesser degree, if you're in the trump campaign? >> no. i think it's an expectations issue. >> but, bill, the expectation is that we're going to forgive donald trump for his crassness, for his lack of political correctness, for his lack of polish, because, you know what? what usually goes with those things is a deceptiveness and a lack of prototivety in government and a system we reject. do you identify that dynamic as powerful? >> chris, definitely it's powerful and that has propelled donald trump largely to where he is now, but we're moving into a different phase of this election right now. i mean, people, i think --
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donald trump has gotten where he is now by a series of insults. on that stage it was little marco, it was lyin' ted, now it's crooked hillary and then it's pocahontas. that's got to run out. i think at this people people are looking mono-immano a mano,r clinton or trump or sanders, looking for your ideas. where will you take the country? look at donald trump's energy speech yesterday. it was embarrassing the stuff he was coming up with. get rid of every environmental regulation ever. >> that's not what he said. people liked his speech yesterday and saw it as a step in the right direction. drill more. people from keeping us drill on federal land. why? let's do it. i'll work with the conservationists but they don't get to ruin the economy nap was his speech? >> no. get rit of regulations on coal prants. allow drilling anywhere and everywhere. i'm going to do nothing -- >> hold back on the climate accord. >> ignore climate accords and
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everything. can you didn't do that. >> why can't you do it, hillary? who says he don't want t. first of all, polls overwhelmingly show people supported president obama's effort to create a worldwide agreement on climate change. so they do support an energy mix and they do support modest drilling but they don't support getting rid of the environmental protection agency, they don't support getting rid of all regulations. they like the fact coal plants are regulated and that's moderates and moderate republicans alike. there is a sector of, of the economy and trump support that will support that, but that is not going to be a majority popular opinion in this country. pulling back on all environment. >> you at home, see what happens there? with very little effort, do you see how the sanders people and the clinton people join forces to combat trump?
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>> to ganging up on y up on you >> listen, light work for me, bill. i'm asking questions here. >> ouch. >> point for point, forget it. being nice because we're going into such an important weekend. thank you both very much. appreciate the perspective. the best to you and your families going forward. >> thank you. combating trump and cuomo. dnt making good on his promise to raise money for veterans. the republican nominee says he's ready to get specific about the numbers. details, coming up. hmmmmmm.....
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donald trump says the full accounting on his veterans fund-raiser, remember, when he skipped the debate back in january, will be revealed monday, memorial day, his campaign boefrting $6 million was raised even though no one
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could account for the exact amount or groups in line to receive it. cnn's drew griffin has been following this money and joins us now with the latest. drew? >> reporter: donald trump actually called me after we'd been harassing his campaign to find out where the money is going and coming from. he said the reason there's been a delay is some of the big donors actually forgot that they donated to his cause. he said he were to go out and remind them, and he says now they have the checks in and are going to be able to sdlabt money and give an accounting for all of that money on monday, memorial day. that's what he told me, and he also said that you know, he continues to complain about the press coverage of this saying he's the only guy, like he said on tuesday, the only guy that does something good and gets criticized for it. take a listen to his speech on tuesday. >> think of it, you're me, you're out, making a speech pup say, i have an idea. let's raise money for the vets, and all of a sudden it boomer
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ranges and more and more are coming in and friends of mine start calling and we raised all of this money. more than $5 million. i think it's more than $5.5 million and we raise all of this money and then you get bad press. >> he told me last night it will be close to the $6 million figure, ana. >> of course, he also said he donated $1 million himself. did he? >> you know what? he actually did. and he did it, gave it to a pretty good cause. it's the marine and law enforcement foundation. they give money to kids of fallen officers and fallen marines. we confirmed with that charity. it's $1 million, in the bank and from donald trump. >> putting his money where hi mouhis mouth is. and discussing this and much more with veterans, chairman of the senate kmft homeland security and governmental affairs, also holding a hearing next week on all of the issues plaguing the v.a. senator, thanks for being here. >> good morning, alisyn.
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>> are you satisfied now? so donald trump raised, he says, close to $6 million for the veterans. are you satisfied it's gone to the right places? >> donated to the cause, pretty good. maybe didn't make the $6 million. i've been involved in charity, sometimes it's difficult to collect pledges. wonderful intention. if he doesn't get the full $6 million, even $1 million is pretty generous and helpful. >> we should applaud him for raising that money now that it seems he'll hit that mfig that . >> dnt knows thousand market and did it for a good cause. >> you're holding a hearing next week on the continuing problems that plague the v.a., particularly in your home state, toma, wisconsin, refer to this as candy land, because so many narcotic painkillers have been handed out there, seemingly without any kind of judicious
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oversight. what's going on there? >> first time i heard about it was when the news media reported it in january 2015 and because i had become the chair of homeland security i could immediately start our investigation. the doctor known at candy man and his nurse practitioner are gone, held accountable. and the acting inspector general, captured by the agency, buried all of these reports, that didn't allow the public to understand what was happening. so it was known. they were calling this doctor candy man as far back at 2004 and nobody had done anything about it. >> by the way, 33 unexpected deaths. deaths that basically shouldn't have happened, possibly because of this overprescription. how weren't people aware of this? >> it was buried. you know, it just never came to the light of day. we're going to hold a hearing. we've got about a 350-page report that lays it all out. 350 pages, kind of hard to go through in a couple seconds here, but just time after time
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people raised the issue with members of the v.a., the department of justice, fbi or dea. people didn't do anything about it. >> not just that medical center. the v.a. hospitals, as we've said, crisis after crisis. the "wall street journal" just this week reporting that thousands, the department of veterans administration declared thousands of vets dead. we're not dead. and cancelled their benefits. i mean it just seems as though -- it's rife with problems. who do you blame? >> alisyn, we have got to honor the promises to the fine effort among us. we have to do that, and the problem is, trying to do that in a bureaucratic system. face it, the v.a. health care system is a, is a single payer government-run bureaucratic system, and yet that is unfortunately what a lot of people want to impose on all of us. i suggest we not do that. best way to handle this literally, give veterans more choice, allow them access to private health care. we have a veterans choice
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program. the v.a. isn't add ministering it properly. a pilot program. we have to do that better and honor those promises. >> you blame the single payer system and bureaucracy more than a person or incompetence going on there? >> can you point toot a bureaucracy that works as well as per free market and the lowest possible price, best possible kuwa possible cost, and i would have loved to be a monopolist, i was a manufacturer. wouldn't that be good for a health care system? >> d.a. secretary robert mcdonald. should we go? >> had troubles comments. >> he sort of equated the long lines to get care at the v.a. hospitals wit long lines at dmiz wor disney world. his point, once you get what you're there for it works. >> we've had general shinseki, mcdonald, these are good men
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trying to horne promises but trying to deal with this massive bureaucracy. will we start realizing more the bureaucracy? >> he can stay in your mind? >> it's an enormous challenge. i don't envy his task, trying to corral in this bureaucracy. again, i believe the solution to be allowing our veterans to enter private health care. have the v.a. system forcus on things like missing limbs, specific deals, and specific injuries but let our vets access private health care. >> donald trump. you say you support him but don't endorse him. that's the difference? >> i intend to support our nominee. we need to grow our economy. allowing it to realize its full potential. reducing the regulatory burden. securing our borders. enormous problem, our lack of security of the border.
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>> he talks about all of those things. >> that what i'm saying. i will be concentrating on the areas of agreement to build our economy, to build our military, to defeat isis, secure our borders. if we do that, concentrate on those areas of agreement that unify as as a party we'll be in pretty good shape in november. >> are you going to endorse him? >> do everything i can to support achieving those goals. >> why not endorse him? why are you making that distinction? >> i'm going to support those goals. >> okay. senator ron johnson, thanks so much for being on "new day." great to talk to you. >> have a great morning. >> you, too. over to chris. >> good answer there at the end. so we've been seeing these horrible twisters and storms wrecking parts of the country. people fleeing for their lives, but not everyone. some run into the storm. storm chasers. we're going to talk to two storm chasers about being at the heart of the storm. why they do it, and what they know about what's coming.
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x1 makes it easy to find what you love. call or go online and switch to x1. only with xfinity. it has been a week of severe weather, a long week. especially for those who live across the midwest and central plains. folks there dealing with torrential rain, flooding, storms that have spawned numerous tornadoes, and storm chaser are putting themselves right in the path. >> we have another tornado that just touched down, david, with the other wall cloud, straight north of us, three quarters of a mile. oh, my gosh. there's a house over there. pan left, amy. >> oh my goodness. the voice of ww news-tv tracking a twister along side his wife
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amy also a storm tracker for the station and both join us now. when we look at those pictures, you can't help but kind of get g goose bumps. scary, emotional, everything to us, but you're so close. val, just hoe close did you get to some of those tornadoes? you saw like 15, you sewed aw it one day storm tracking alone? >> yeah. 15 tornadoes. and probably a quarter mile away from some of those, ana. >> amy, how do you protect yourself? >> well, you know, basically, we've been doing this for 25 years plus and we've kind of learns, you know, over the years how close we can get. how close is safe and how close is not safe. so what we try to -- try to stay back just far enough to be safe but close enough to see it and see what's going on. >> amy, when you are so close to those tornadoes, just a quarter mile away, what is that
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experience like? describe it for us. >> oh, it's really surreal. i mean, of course, we have so much to do. there's video to take and we have so many people that we're talking to all at once, seems like, but, you know, when you're in that moment and you look up and you see that right in front of you, it's just unbelievable. it really is. >> i want to take a listen to some sound where you are recording, and val, you talk about two candidattornadoes mero one. let's listen and talk on the back side. >> okay. >> the two tornadoes are merging into one just north of us, quarter mile down the road to our north. one quarter of a mile -- oh, man. this is going to be a -- a stronger, violent tornado. the chaser behind suss in the ditch, backing up trying to turn around. >> so, val what was going through your mind there? >> well, first of all, over the years i've now been chasing a lot of years and i have everybody inner seen anything
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quite as crazy as this. two wall clouds, two mesos, if you will. we were splitting the difference. looking at one to the left and one to the right, just barely south of both of them, and so both of those were producing tornadoes. at one point the right wall cloud had two on the ground while the left had one. three on the ground at the same time. so when i'm seeing that happening, that storm was going north initially and all of a sudden it stopped, and it just almost started digging a hole in this field off to our northwest and then it started coming to the east. i mean, towards us. it crossed in front of us, but this other wall cloud started taking over, and pulling the other rotation, if you will, tornado, sobriety it and they merpged into one at in point. >> how long was that tornado on the ground? any estimate? >> you know, we saw 15 tornadoes that day. you know, we doing a facebook live stream at the time and we started it, and we only get an hour and a half, you know, on those streams, and we filled that whole stream.
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so an hour and a half of video right there. >> i know there were some 100 tornadoes reported across the country this week, and in just one part of kansas alone, at least 28 homes and homesteads were damped. your video, an hour and a half long. we scrolled through. it's quite amazing. you see some of the damage to homes in the area where you were, near the end of your video. amy, when you see that damage, what do you think? how does that affect you? affec? >> it affects us greatly. our hearts go out to those affected. that's what drives us to do what we do. warning people of the storm coming their way is so important, when we come upon a damaged scene, it is just hearbreaking. there is nothing you can do about it. you hope everyone was okay. >> amy and val, thank you so much for joining us this morning and sharing your video and insight with us. good to see you. >> thanks for having us.
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>> stay safe, we know there are more storms in store. alisyn. all right, ana, donald trump lashed out at plenty of women and people, including three prominent politicians, just this week. next, we'll ask two women who is dealt with trump personally and they've had very different experiences. listen to their stories. mobility is very important to me. that's why i use e*trade mobile. it's on all my mobile devices, so it suits my mobile lifestyle. and it keeps my investments fully mobile... even when i'm on the move.
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does donald trump have a woman problem? elizabeth warren, susana martinez and hillary clinton may answer it one way. let's talk to two women who have had personal dealings with donald trump. tiana alvarado, as well as elizabeth beck, who deposed him in 2011. you've had personal dealings with donald trump. tiana, i want to start with you. you've had a very interesting deal with him. you were a contestant in 2011. you said you had a great experience with donald trump, despite the fact he didn't want you on the show, and he fired you. so let's start there. why didn't he want you on the
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show? >> wow, i'm so sorry. i can't see anything. >> i know, it's hard via satellite. i feel your pain. >> oh, there we go. technical technically, i think 15 of us he didn't want, so i don't feel that special in not being wanted. but i think, you know, at that time, the apprentice is a show, and so he is producing a product, and i didn't fit what, in his vision an apprentice should be. >> but somehow you managed to get on the show and what were your interactions like with him? >> you know, i know there is a lot of controversy around him regarding the way he treats women. and i don't feel that it's his -- i don't feel he is anti-woman. i just think he is a person that you need to earn his respect, whether a man or a woman. i know going into the show, i guess to better answer your question, i was more chosen by
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producers in the beginning, versus him. because i didn't fit what he wanted on an apprentice. i didn't have ivy league school, yalearvard background he would normally want. as time passed on the show, i earned his respect and his behavior toward me changed and i could tell it was reflected in my prize as project manager and how he tried to help me after i was fired. >> you say he set up a job interview for you after you were fired, which is obviously a wonderful thing to do. okay, so is it fair to say that in conclusion for you, that he once you earned his respect, it wasn't about you being a woman, that you had a good relationship with him? >> yeah. and that's what i'm saying. i know coming into it, he didn't -- i feel bad saying he didn't want me there. he never told me he didn't want me there. i am going by what i heard from producers. but yeah, i just, i earned more
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respect for him knowing that i had earned his respect, and the way that he treated me. >> yeah. >> and i'm -- i was tcougar, an that sets me up to be treated differently. >> okay. elizabeth, you had a different experience. you are an attorney, you did countless dealings with businessmen in real estate along the way, and tell us about your experience. you had a contentious experience with donald trump in which breast-feeding came up. >> i did, and you know, you know, i have to say, you know, tyana mentioned her pedigree, but i've got to say as a graduate of yale law school, i don't think pedigree has anything to do with it, because he certainly behaved in a very erratic manner with me. >> explain what happened. you and he had a contentious dealing, and you wanted to break
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for lunch. what was happening? >> we had agreed to a lunch. i was just doing my job, you know. so it was a deposition, and in a deposition, a lawyer asks you questions under oath, and you can't not answer. >> what didn't he like about that? >> i don't know, you know. mr. trump sitting there, he has to answer questions, can't not refuse to answer. and has to finish the process. >> but was this because you were an attorney trying to get a deposition, or because you were a woman? >> i don't know. but you know what, what happened was we had agreed to a lunch break, everybody in the room agreed to a lunch break. this is not scary stuff, okay. we're breaking for lunch. and his own lawyer, mr. hermann, a former president of the florida bar, highly regarded attorney in miami, his lawyer
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says i would like to take a minute to use the restroom, and trump turns to him and says this is a deposition okay, you don't have to take my word for it. he says no, no, no bathroom break. >> okay, well, there you go. that's an interesting point. because he is treating the man the same way as he treated you when you said i need to take a break to go breast-feed. >> yeah, so he sits down and i had to break for lunch for medical reasons. >> yeah. >> i don't want to tell everybody. >> of course. >> i don't want to tell everybody what the reasons were, but you know what, everybody knows, i had to take a break for lunch to breast pump. >> yes, but, and donald trump didn't like that. what did he say to you? >> he didn't know. he said no lunch. so i said no, i think we're breaking for lunch. and he said no lunch. and i had to start creating a record. so i said you know what, i'm going to tell everybody what i need the lunch break for. >> i know he said that was disgusting, but at the end of the whole thing, did you think
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you were being treated differently because you were a woman? >> okay, you can hate women, but not exclusively women, okay. so he is -- i don't think -- i think there is many, many examples of trump treating women in a very disrespectful manner. he treats a lot of people in a disrespectful manner. >> there you go. in fact, that's what some of his supporters have said. he treat gs everybody the same way. >> there are huge groups of people that he hate gs and now shows us he hates, muslims, people without proper immigration papers. >> we will have to talk about that at some future time, because we've run out of time. >> i'm sorry. i know i'm ranting, but you know, as you can see i -- >> we know where you are stand. you're bernie sanders supporter. tyana, elizabeth, thank you for your personal stories, both interesting. we're following a lot of news this morning, so let's get right
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to it. the world was forever changed here. we have a shared responsibility to look directly into the eye of history and ask what we must do differently. >> he is a president who has done a horrible job. >> a lot of the proposals that he has made display ignorance. >> let him be a little nervous. >> donald trump is an unqualified loose cannon. >> here i am watching hillary fight and she can't close the deal. >> elizabeth warren, who, pocahontas? >> very offensive. >> i think she is as native american as i am. >> that is correct! >>announcer: this is "new day," with chris cuomo and al since
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camerota. good morning, everyone. may 27th, 8:00 in the east. ana is with us. great to have you here with us this week. >> happy friday, everyone. breaking news for you. president obama making history, going where no sitting u.s. president has gone before. obama, the first u.s. president to set foot in hiroshima, since the first atomic bomb there, killing more than 140,000 people during the closing days of world war ii. >> would the president apologize? that was the question in the air. the answer is no. but the president did make history in more ways than one. and there are some new twists in the election to tell you about as well. we have this story and the 2016 race covered the way only cnn can, let's begin be michelle live in japan. michelle. >> reporter: president obama out here this morning said that words can't really describe the level of suffering that this very place represents, and likely will forever.
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by the same token, it is tough to describe the depth of emotion that brought out in the japanese people. they've been waiting for this a long time. many we spoke to said when they heard president obama's words, they cried. an historic moment in american and japanese history, president obama becoming the first sitting u.s. president to visit hiroshima. the president laying a symbolic wreath with prime minister shinzo abe. hugging a 79-year-old survivor. seven decades after the u.s. dropped the bomb that ended world war ii. >> 71 years ago, on a bright cloudless morning, death fell from the sky and the world was changed and demonstrated that mankind possessed the means to destroy itself.
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>> reporter: the president, not apologizing for the events of that day, but calling for a world without nuclear weapons. >> we have a shared responsibility to look directly into the eye of history. and ask what we must do differently to curb such suffering again. >> reporter: and calling for a shared human responsibility. >> technological progress without equivalent institutions can doom us. the scientific revolution that led to the splitting of an atom requires a moral revolution as well. this is why we come to this place. >> reporter: this was a much different speech than we usually hear the president give. he wasn't speaking to maernls. he wasn't speaking to japanese. he wasn't speaking to politics. he was speaking to humanity,
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saying that it is not just denuclearization, it is about how about we look at how we view war itself. and it's time for people to embrace what he called the radical notion that we're all part of a single human family. ana. >> all right, michelle, traveling with the president in hiroshima. thank you. president obama's trip coming at a critical time for america on the world stage. a lot of eyes focused on the 2016 race, donald trump brushing off the comments from president obama that world leaders are rattled by the prospects of trump becoming president. jason carroll joining us with more. >> donald trump's moment, gloating to all the nay sayers they were wrong. north dakota put him over the top. he took aim at the president and hillary clinton. >> we had a big day today. today was the day where we hit
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the 1,237, right. >> donald trump, officially clinching the republican nomination. and squashing the efforts from the gop establishment to stop him. >> most of them said, and they said very strongly, he will never be the nominee. i could name them, but i don't want to embarrass them. >> trump boasting he is one step closer to the white house than hillary clinton. >> here i am watching hillary fight, and she can't close the deal. and that should be such an easy deal to close. >> trump continuing to hit clinton hard on that inspector general's report, which criticized her for using her personal e-mail server to do government business when she was secretary of state. >> she has bad judgment. this was all bad judgment. probably illegal. we'll have to find out what the f.b.i. says about it. it was certainly bad judgment. >> taking aim at president obama. >> he is a president who has done a horrible job. obama could never come up with a solution, number one, incompete
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incompetent. >> after obama voiced world leaders concerns about trump during a g7 summit. >> they're rattled by him, the proposals he has made, display either ignore ranls ance or a c attitude. >> hillary clinton, echoing those fierce. >> th-- fears. >> this man is within reach of the most important job in the world, so it should concern every american. >> but a defiant trump is facing the criticism. >> i'll have a better relationship with other countries than he has, except we'll do much better and they won't be taking advantageous of us any more. >> as he is hammered about his remarks about democratic senator, elizabeth warren. >> who, pocahontas? pocahontas. >> that's offensive. >> is it? >> very offensive. >> oh, i'm sorry about that. pocahontas? is that what you said? >> i think she is is as native
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american as i am, okay. that i will tell you. but she is a woman that has been very infective, other than she has a big mouth. >> trump also hinting he is wide open to who his running mate will be after his campaign chairman said choosing a woman or minority would be viewed as pandering. >> we're looking for absolute competence. i fully expect that we will have many women involved. >> going forward, trump saying he is going to try to turn some blue states red. he said he would focus on places like new york, washington and california. trump has two events in california today. another focus continued to unite the party, he has yet to earn the endorsement of house speaker paul ryan, but so far, that has not affected his popularity with his supporters. chris. >> jason, thank you very much. let's discuss what is happening in trump world with sarah huckabee sanders. senior advisor to donald trump. it's goo it's good to see you again. >> great to be here. good morning. >> policy first.
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donald trump put out a big speech about his energy policy, about coal, about oil, about regulation. and the criticism of it is that he proposed a lot of things that can't be done. you can't get rid of all of the epa regulations. you can't just make coal as huge as it once was. there are good and bad reasons for that. fair criticisms that the proposal can't do what donald trump says it will do. >> i think there are some big things you can do, and exactly what donald trump said is we need to move to an all above approach. the obama administration and his energy policy has been job killing, raised energy costs across america. has been horrible for our country. we have to go back where we put all options on the table. the epa has been terrible. it has been an out of control agency, not governed by anyone, where they just make decisions without really a lot of over
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sight and they've got to be reigned back in and reverse what has taken place over the last eight years under the obama administration by taking away the energy independence that americans have enjoyed, and making us more dependant on foreign energy and go back to where we can energize our own country on our own. >> sarah, that is either not the reality, or it is the reality for a reason. the environmental changes that the epa has put into effect, like every government agency, it has its problems, no one will argue that. but reducing fossil fuel dependence is a popular thing in america and that's a big part of the regulations, and in terms of energy independence, they put out 74% of the oil needs. i guess you could go to 100%, but the idea that we're somehow, you know, really deficient in terms of how much of our own needs we provide for, it's just not true. >> well, we have become more
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dependant on foreign energy, and we've got to be, if you can't fuel yourself and fight for yourself, you can't be a free country. so if we continue to go down the road of becoming more and more dependant on foreign energy, we're taking away our ability to be a free country. >> but we're pumping more now. >> the epa is far worst than a lot of the government agencies. of course they all have their problems, but this is an agency without any over sight and rules without any input from other places, and so it is actually got to be reigned in, it is across the board known that the epa is become an out of control agency, and has to have some major changes take place. >> i'm putting in there as food for thought, the united states is putting out more oil and natural gas than it has in a long time. also, this comes down to -- >> we're also using a lot more, chris. >> that's true. the numbers aren't expressing some type of desperation. now, part of this conversation,
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though, is about global warming. i want you to straighten something out for me. your background, i don't know if you can tell right now, this beautiful blue ocean, santa rosa beach, florida. but it does bring to mind the idea of global warming. it's interesting. donald trump has said that china made up global warming to hurt u.s. manufacturing. he has put in an application for a golf course in ireland, saying he needs to build a retaining wall to fight the effects of global warming. does he mean china is trying to attack his golf course or saying two different things? >> you know, i'm not real sure on the details of donald trump's business. that's a completely separate thing outside of the campaign. that's something you would have to ask -- >> either you believe in global warming or not. does donald trump believe that global warming is real, as does 90 plus% of the scientific community. >> look, i haven't it h that
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conversation with him. i think there are still a lot of questions around global warming. whether you believe it or not, what causes it. that's something we have yet to determine. >> who is we? 90% of the scientific community has agreed. >> plmaybe that exists, but not what causes it. that's a question to be answered. >> terms of the state of play, do you think donald trump will debate bernie sanders? >> yeah, i think he certainly happy to and open to do it. he thinks it could be a great way to raise money for charity. the thing this shows is donald trump is not afraid of bernie sanders nearly as much as hillary clinton is. i think what's happened to bernie sanders by hillary clinton in the democrats is frankly kind of sad. they've ignored him and pushed him to the side. and hillary has yet to unite democrats and lockup the nomination. until she does that, i think she is, you know, has a responsibility to continue to
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debate him and continue showing a contrast that she has until she can lockup the nomination. in the meantime, if donald trump can help raise money for charity by debating bernie sanders, he is more than happy to do that. >> also, last question here. in your estimation, why is it okay to call elizabeth warren pocahontas? >> look, i think elizabeth warren has come after donald trump almost as aggressive as anybody, and you know, i think all things are fair game in this part of the political process. she has been relentlessly attacking donald trump, and injecting herself into the conversation, and i think it's been done time and time again, if you hit donald trump, he is going to hit back harder. >> but doesn't how you hit matter? would you call her pocahontas? >> no, but she hasn't said anything about me either. i don't know that she knows i exist. i don't think i have any reason
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to engage elizabeth warren today. >> sarah huckabee sanders, you certainly exist and it is a good thing for donald trump that you do. thank you for joining us on "new day." the best to you and your family for the weekend. >> you bet. thank you, chris. you too. >> ana. all right, the good news, we are this close to the holiday weekend. the bad news, if you're headed out, you're going to need to pack your patience, because the long security lines may not be easing up any time soon. yet the tsa is taking some action, asking congress for millions of dollars to beef up the number of screeners. let's go to rosa flores live at chicago o'hare international airport with the latest. are the lines any better this morning, rosa? >> reporter: good morning. you are know, when you first arrive at the airport and see the long line, it is really daunting, because you're thinking oh, no, i'm going miss my flight. i want to you take a look, because you can see that the lines, while they're long, they
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are moving very swiftly. i actually gave my business card to a traveler that was at the end of the line and she just text messaged me a while ago. it took her about 30 minutes to get to the front of the line. but tsa is recommending for domestic flights to arrive two hours before and three hours before for international flights. now, you can see, it is moving at a pretty good clip, and the tsa here in chicago has added about 58 agents. they tripled overtime and then take a look at this. they also have five new canines, that's one of the reasons why the lines are moving faster, and alisyn, i've got it tell you, a few weeks ago, people at o'hare were using social media and using the #ohate instead of o'hare. we haven't seen that hashtag this morning. otherwise they would complain on social media. >> that's progress, rosa, nobody wants the #ohate.
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the memory of the morning of august 6, 1945, must never fade. >> well, that was president obama this morning, becoming the first sitting u.s. president to vis visit hiroshima. the president, taking part in a wreath laying ceremony, and you see him hugging one of the survivors. so let's discuss all of this and so much more with former obama senior advisor, now cnn senior political commentator, david axelrod. good morning. >> good morning, alisyn. >> how significant do you think this moment is? >> i think it's very significant, and i think that, you know, we always get caught up in sort of that domestic political debate about apologies and so 50 years ago, the smithsonian wanted to on the 50th anniversary of hiroshima have an exhibit about hiroshima, and that created a great
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controversy. what the president has done, he has risen above that and used the occasion to focus the world on the tremendous destructive capacity of these weapons and the need to find better means to resolve conflict. i thought it was particularly meaningful in this region, given north korea and its possession of nuclear weapons and its eratic. what is a strong ally in japan. >> it's interesting study and contrast. obama taking time to discuss the elections, specifically donald trump, saying that he rattled foreign leaders, trump firing back that it is good they're rattled about him. there is this conflict of what strength is. how do you think that plays in the election? well, it's interesting. i think i've said before that i think some of the things that
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have propelled donald trump forward in this election may become a barrier for those people who are uncertain about what they want to do in -- it has a lot to do with this. it has a lot to do with how america relates with the porwor. it may be good to shake things up in the politics, but not necessarily good to unsettle the world. as i've said many times here, presidents, the things they say can send armies marching and markets tumbling. if donald trump said for example when he was president of the united states that he thought japan and south korea should have nuclear weapons or that america's credit tors should take a haircut, it would have created it turmoil all over the world. presidents have mortal power, and what they say and what they do really matter. so i think it could play against him in a general election. >> all right, donald trump hit
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1,237. number everybody said he may never hit, there may be a contested convention. all sorts of productions whether he could or wouldn't. so now this a good moment for reflection on here at home as well. how do you think it went so differently than really anybody predicted? >> well, me included by the way. i would be remiss if i didn't throw myself into the pool of ignorant pundits who missed the entire thing from the beginning. >> you're in good company. >> it actually speaks to that class -- >> i mean everybody mostly got it wrong. >> alisyn didn't, to be honest. she has been telling me for a long time, trump is stronger than they're saying. what's right is right. i've got to give her her due. >> you are now officially a pundit. >> i can get your paycheck. >> you've earned that distinction. >> okay, we can trade any time.
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but the -- look, getting back to trump, it is an extraordinary achievement. whether you like donald trump or dislike him, whether you like his tactics or dislike his tactics. this is a major achievement. he was completely discounted as a kind of side show when he started running. he didn't really spend the resources some of the other candidates spent completely dominated television news. and used it to propel himself forward, an amazing achievement. he tapped into that's out there. what it does speak to, the difference between the pundit class and voters in certainly the republican primary, it goes to class. i think there are a whole bunch of people out there in this country who have experienced this economy differently than perhaps people in new york and washington. >> yeah. >> and you know, the changes have benefited the changes of globalization, the changes of
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technology, have benefited people in the upper class. the middle class and people below the middle class have really struggled with stagnant wages that have gone on for now decades. this is a fun damental problem, and this is powerful. >> will the debate happen between bernie sanders and donald trump? >> you know, it's interesting. i can totally understand why bernie sanders wants this debate. this would be a gift for bernie sanders to have the opportunity to -- i mean, the audience would be tremendous, and he could tee off on donald trump. my question is, what is it in for donald trump. the short-term, he can make hillary clinton uncomfortable, he can maybe boost bernie a little in california, but she'll still be the nominee. bernie sanders is a very good debater, and he could inflict
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real damage on donald trump. if i'm the people working for him, auto i'll saying you know what, i'm not sure the short-term rewards are worth the long-term risk of going into the ring with this guy. and him landing some really solid blows against me. >> i don't know, trump said he would do it, then he said he wouldn't, then he said i'm open to it. sarah huckabee sanders says he is open for doing it for charity. who knows. >> we shall see. david, thank you so much for all of the reflection, including the self-reflection this morning. thank you. >> have a great weekend you guys. >> you too. so donald trump is firing back now at president obama, saying it is a good thing that he is rattling world leaders. we're going to ask an ambassador to afghanistan and syria, next. we'll come to the zoo! only safelite can fix your windshield anywhere in the us.
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after worrying - no cancer. i was lucky. women... please get a pap test to check for cervical cancer. and get the inside knowledge about gynecologic cancers. for you and the people who care about you. donald trump's world view is coming under scrutiny after president obama revealed that world leaders are, quote, rattled by the process of a trump presidency. trump says good. they should be rattled. it helps our leverage. let's discuss with ryan crocker, former u.s. ambassador to afghanistan, syria, dean of the bush school at texas a&m university. very good to have you. best to you and your family as we head into this important weekend. >> thank you. >> america's cultural
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recognition. so to you, what matters most in scrutinizing a trump or clinton presidency? what are your concerns? >> i spent my career in the foreign service, almost all of it in the middle east. i was an ambassador six times, three times under republican presidents, three times under democratic presidents. so i focus on the issues in crunchy parts of the world. temperament is important. >> how? >> don't panic. don't shoot from the hip. >> what about projecting strength? he says i'm strong. when you sit down with me, you're sitting across from a guy in his estimation, best negotiator in the world, i'm going to show you might is right when it comes to america and you'll respond. >> judgment is what is key here. we are america. we are strong. we are a great nation. it doesn't rest on any one individual. the leader of the nation has to
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be able to project certainly determination, will, but also judgment. the world is a complicated place. you can't bully it around. >> he says president obama has made us look weak. he apologizes for everything he is in, he is out, can't get anything done in these war torn aspects of that part of the world, namely isis, and that that's trump's advantage. he does project strengths and he'll be definitive in his movements, and won't make the same police takes as bush and obama, of being in but halfway. >> interesting point. this administration has broken with the post world war ii pattern of broad engagement in the world. does that make us weak, no. the debate i would like to see in this general election is are we going to be engaged in the world with adversaries and allies alike or continue this
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withdrawal. that for me is the question. not strength versus weakness. we're strong. it is engagement versus disengagement. >> when you think about a trump presiden presidency, do you see a danger in it or do you think that's political rhetoric? >> we're seeing a lot of rhetoric on both sides. i look forward to the conventions. i look forward to a serious set of debates, moving into the general election. because right now, we really haven't seen on either side much in the way of a serious discussion of issues. we have to have that discussion. >> secretary of state is using the -- clinton is using the word dangerous to describe her, but when you look at her pedigree, what does that tell you that get laid at the feet of the administration, she was there for a large part of this, is the time as secretary of state necessarily a check in her favor? >> well, that is, again, a
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discussion i would like to see. let's look at the issues she dealt with as secretary of state, how they turned out, why they turned out that way. we haven't had that kind of discussion yet. i can say, i was her ambassador to afghanistan. i thought she was a great boss. >> what does that mean? >> she was focused. she paid attention to the issues. and she had that particular ability to know when she had enough information to make a decision, and then make it. not to move too quickly, but not to agonize forever over getting all the facts in one place. in an operational world, you've got to move. >> what is your take on this mun fundamental disagreement that clinton and trump have about how to treat other world leaders. trump says they have to know i'm in the driver's side. i'm strong. clinton is more along the lines
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of what we see in the obama administration, let's reach out, don't be extreme. let's try to work with these people and be more cooperative. you know, and more of a suggestive way of compliance. where do you fall on that balance? >> i think one of the most important qualities in international diplomacy is empathy. understand how you're dealing with and how that person sees the word. empathy isn't sympathy. it isn't about playing nice. it is about understanding both your adversaries and your allies. to think your way into their heads, to know then how to deal with them. so it is not a one size fits all. i'm going to be tough with everybody isn't going to work. it's developing relations, thinking your way into their world, and then knowing how to move with both adversaries and with allies. >> ryan crocker, thank you for teeing up what matter in this
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discussion, and hopefully it begins to be had. come back so you can weigh in. thank you, sir. >> thank you, chris. >> best to you for the weekend. alisyn. chris, and you i talk about the power of words, and there was an epic conclusion to this year's scripps national spelling bee. talk about words. we'll speak to the winners, that's right, plural, next. ♪
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brains, in person. what do you got? >> only two teams that ever come back when trailing three games to one in conference finals history. they looked deflated the last two games, but now back at home. cuomo, they got their groove back. kevin durant, like a cat trying to point a laser. steph curry, quicker than the cat. 30 points for the reigning mvp. staying alive, back to oklahoma tomorrow. curry's proclaiming, we ain't going home. series, 3-2, do or die for the warriors. finally, tonight is the night, ealy makes his broadcast debut, the pro gamers duking it out here in atlanta at turner studios for a piece of get this, $1.4 million prize pool. the action starts tonight at 10:00 eastern, and catch the action on tbs throughout the ten week season. playing a game called counter
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strike, and if you haven't seen it, it is way cooler than duck hunt. >> i'm missing out apparently. a spelling bee so epic, one winner wasn't enough. coming up, the co-champ and they'll talk to us about their secrets. the world needs heros as we remember all of our fallen heros this memorial day weekend. we're encouraging you to tell us about everyday people doing their part to make a difference in the world. anderson cooper explains how. tonight, we're recognizing some incredible acts of compassion and kindness. >> ladies and gentlemen, please join me in honoring -- >> cnn hero. >> cnn hero. >> cnn hero. >> this year marks the 10th anniversary of cnn heros, celebrating everyday people changing the word. how do we find them? with your help.
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feldenkrais,
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f-e-l-d-e-n-k-r-a-i-s. feldenkrais. >> that's correct. >> gesellschaft, g-e-s-e-l-l-s-c-h-a-f-t, gesellschaft. >> that is correct. >> how do they know that? >> so cute and talented. with that, the third year in a row the scripps national spelling bee ended in a tie, 282 competitors from all across the country and even around the world to win the trophy and $40,000 each. joining us now, the champions, 13-year-old jie ram hathwar and 11-year-old nihar janga. this is so cool, guys. i want to start with you, nihar. your first spelling bee competition, and you won. how did that feel? >> it felt really great, because i didn't expect it at all. but i mainly wanted to thank my
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mom, because she is the one that was my main coach and she helped me a lot in this spelling bee to prepare for it. >> that's so cool. >> my sister is the one who inspired me. >> is your sister older or younger? >> she is in ninth grade right now. >> okay, so she is older. i know you're only 11 years old, fifth great. j jairam, apparently the smarts run in the family. did your brother give you some tips. >> yeah, my brother won in 2014 as a co-champion as well. and he basically just told me that to keep calm, and poise and if i don't know the word, just don't get too agitated, and then don't just like forget about everything that you know so far, and just try your best to figure it out. >> and you kept your cool,
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because i know there were a couple of times you did get the words wrong, but then nihar had a couple of flubs. i want to play a quick clip. let's watch. >> inside 30 seconds. >> d-r-a-a-t-h-a-r. >> when i misspelled it, i thought it was over, because i knew that nihar was an excellent speller. >> nihar, what are you going to do with the money, $40,000? >> i'm going to save it for harvard so i can become a great
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new in you a neurosurgeon to help diseases like alzheimer's and pa parkinson's. >> i'm thinking the lines of a doctor, too. >> very cool. we'll keep your names in mind. i want to have a little fun right now. let's bring chris and alisyn into the mix and test their spelling abilities. a couple of words that these youngens got right. the first word is refresherswa. >> palate cleanser. >> does that help? >> does that help? >> cheater. i knew you were a cheater.
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>> give us another word and i want the fellas, guys, if you can help us, they're going to give us a word, you know we're not going to be able to spell it because we're not as smart as you. see if you can help us spell this, give us some clues about how to look at the word. >> so it's lygia. >> don't look at the screen. >> give me a hint. >> i'm not looking at the screen. give me a hint on what i should be doing to not spell it foe -- >> lygiy, the ending, it is like certain animal of, so there is a suffix for the ending. >> does that help, chris? >> i don't understand the words he just said. >> let's put the word on the screen to give us an idea of how
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talented these two kids are. >> oh, there was a d in it. the way you pronounced it was wrong. >> gentlemen, thank you so much for joining us. again, congratulations to you. jairam hathwar and nihar janga. we'll see you down the road. >> thank you. the all-new audi a4, with available virtual cockpit. ♪ don'tlive in paris. when you airbnb, you have your own home. so, live there. even if it's just for a night. ♪ ♪ (singing) you wouldn't haul a load without checking your clearance. so why would you invest without checking brokercheck?
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a philadelphia police officer going beyond the call of duty, and cost him his life. jessica snyder has more. >> reporter: dedicated officer and loving dad and grandson. >> it was absolutely incredible, what this officer was able to do. >> he protected like he was sworn to do. >> on march 5, 2015, robert wilson was shot and killed at this game stop in north philadelphia. >> officer was shot. >> get me a medic here asap. >> he is three, four years in this picture. >> constance wilson didn't know what happened to her grandson, since she raised him since he was two.
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the details of his action inside this game stop began to emerge. wilson stopped into the store, while on patrol to buy a video game for his son's birthday. that's when she says two robbers rushed in. >> there were people in there, and protected those people, and so he took on two shooters by himself. he stood his ground, they took him down. >> he stepped away, so the shots weren't going directly at them. they were going toward him. >> he saved those people lives. >> you're proud of him. >> yes, i am, very proud of robby. >> sergeant wilson was awarded the medal of valor at the white house by president obama. >> mrs. constance wilson, accepting on behalf of sergeant wilson, iii, for giving his life to protecting innocent civilians, he put himself in harm's way during an armed robbery. >> he told me, he said i know you're proud of your grandson.
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i am too. extraordinary valor, robert wilson, iii, above and beyond the call of duty. >> reporter: jessica snyder, philadelphia. >> that officer is wonderful and so is his grandmother. she is wonderful as well. have a nice weekend, everyone. time for "newsroom" with pamela brown in for carol costello. >> hi there, hope you have good weekend. "newsroom" starts now. good morning to you, i'm pamela brown in for carol costello, thank you for being us on this friday morning. the president made history. obama, now the first of sitting american president to visit hiroshima. laying a wreath near where the u.s. dropped the first atomic bomb. a move that helped end world war ii. >>

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